The teenage years bridge the gap between childhood and adulthood. As such, much of this time is spent learning how to adapt to the adult world. This brings special challenges for parents, especially regarding things such as your teen’s driving habits. Here are ways you can help your teen become a safer driver.
Associate Good Driving With Being Grown Up
Most teens enjoy feeling that they are more and more a part of the grown up world, and driving is a part of that. Teenagers’ brains are still developing, however, and they tend to be impulsive and susceptible to peer pressure about many new responsibilities. Discuss with them how truly responsible adults practice behaviors such as following traffic laws and practicing patience and courtesy on the road. Make sure they know driving is a privilege can be taken away.
Be a Positive Example
Teens are keen observers. If you want yours to be a responsible driver, you cannot cut corners and drive terribly yourself with your teen in the car. Be a relaxed and smart driver. Use your blinker and follow the speed limits and other traffic laws. It may not sound too important, but it is. As with all things in life, setting a good example is one of the best things a parent can do.
Have a Lawyer or Law Group Discuss Consequences of Poor Driving
If you know an injury lawyer or law group that handles driving violations, including serious ones such as D.U.I. or vehicular manslaughter cases, ask them if they will talk with your teen about consequences drivers face. If you cannot find one who can discuss this with your teen in person, and look for materials online. Remind your teen that you are just trying to offer the best future for them, and that this involves staying safe and responsible on the road.
Enroll your Teen in a Driver’s Training Course
If your teen hasn’t already taken driver’s education courses, enroll them as soon as you can. It is wonderful to spend your own time helping your teen learn to drive safely, but a driver’s training course can offer additional support and knowledge. Driver’s education courses are arranged to provide new drivers the skills necessary for safe driving, and they often give real life examples about consequences of unsafe driving.
Remember that the teen years are not easy, and learning a new skill like driving can be stressful. Most teens thrive more on positive encouragement than criticism, so remember to aim for calm and patience during the entire process.
